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Home/ Questions/Q 65585
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T18:58:10+00:00 2026-05-10T18:58:10+00:00

I have seen the following methods of putting JavaScript code in an <a> tag:

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I have seen the following methods of putting JavaScript code in an <a> tag:

function DoSomething() { ... return false; } 
  1. <a href='javascript:;' onClick='return DoSomething();'>link</a>
  2. <a href='javascript:DoSomething();'>link</a>
  3. <a href='javascript:void(0);' onClick='return DoSomething();'>link</a>
  4. <a href='#' onClick='return DoSomething();'>link</a>

I understand the idea of trying to put a valid URL instead of just JavaScript code, just in case the user doesn’t have JavaScript enabled. But for the purpose of this discussion, I need to assume JavaScript is enabled (they can’t login without it).

I personally like option 2 as it allows you to see what’s going to be run–especially useful when debuging where there are parameters being passed to the function. I have used it quite a bit and haven’t found browser issues.

I have read that people recommend 4, because it gives the user a real link to follow, but really, # isn’t ‘real’. It will go absolutely no where.

Is there one that isn’t support or is really bad, when you know the user has JavaScript enabled?

Related question: Href for JavaScript links: “#” or “javascript:void(0)”?.

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  1. 2026-05-10T18:58:11+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 6:58 pm

    I quite enjoy Matt Kruse’s Javascript Best Practices article. In it, he states that using the href section to execute JavaScript code is a bad idea. Even though you have stated that your users must have JavaScript enabled, there’s no reason you can’t have a simple HTML page that all your JavaScript links can point to for their href section in the event that someone happens to turn off JavaScript after logging in. I would highly encourage you to still allow this fallback mechanism. Something like this will adhere to "best practices" and accomplish your goal:

    <a href="javascript_required.html" onclick="doSomething(); return false;">go</a> 
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